Fri. Dec 20th, 2024

Osinbajo explains CAMA, says Pastors Are Willing to be Accountable

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Vice President Yemi Osinbajo says Pastors in the country are willing to be accountable. He stated this on Thursday, during a speech on the controversial Companies Allied Matters Act, 2020 at a virtual conference of NBA.

At the conference was themed, ‘Step Forward’, the Vice President advised religious leaders who have concerns regarding the recently amended law, to put their concerns in a proposal and forward it to the National Assembly for possible amendment.

Osinbajo said, “The Companies and Allied Matters Act is very huge legislation. It has over 800 sections or so; it is a massive regulation that covers a wide range of issues on companies, all sorts of issues on companies – general meetings, the appointment of directors, etc.

“Now, there is a small section of it called the Incorporated Trustees Section. That small section of it is the section that regulates charities. Churches and mosques are regarded as charities.

“It is the Incorporated Trustees Section of the Companies and Allied Matters Act that has become controversial. And because churches are charities, provisions in the Incorporated Trustees Section obviously affect churches.

“What the churches are concerned about is the provision that says in the event that some wrongdoing is found or perpetrated by the trustees of a particular organization or church, the Registrar-General can go to court, get an order to appoint interim trustees for the church or for whichever organisation that be, to manage the affairs of such a trust.

“The concern of the churches is that it could lead to a situation where practically anybody could be appointed as a trustee to oversee a church. And a church or a mosque or a religious organization is obviously a spiritual organization. If you do not belong or you do not share that faith or have any faith at all, you may be the wrong person and the wrong person may be appointed and create more trouble than was initially the matter before the trustees were appointed.

“My view and what I have also suggested to several of the groups that I have spoken to and the leaderships that I have spoken to is that we have a process by which this can be redressed.

“What can be done is that whatever the proposal for the amendment may be, whatever the views of the church leadership may be regarding the question of how trustees, should be put into a proposal and forwarded to the National Assembly for consideration of an amendment to the law. That is a process that is entirely open and I believe that is a process that ought to be pursued where citizens have serious concerns. We are in a democracy; there is a process for which that can be done.

“Yes, the controversy has generated a lot of fervor but the solution to me seems also quite evident.”

“As a general position, I do not think it is right to say that pastors do not want to be accountable. As a matter of fact, as you know I am a pastor, I know that question is also partly directed to me. But I must say that is not the case. I believe that several Christian organizations and pastors are willing to be accountable.

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